Language, Band 32George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1957 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. thereafter , and for the rest of the stressed syllables within the contour , each stressed syllable is successively weaker in stress until the last : the last stressed syllable is low in tone but ...
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. thereafter , and for the rest of the stressed syllables within the contour , each stressed syllable is successively weaker in stress until the last : the last stressed syllable is low in tone but ...
Seite 131
... stress in the stress contour is high in tone rather than low . The single stress phoneme , accordingly , has two values : to determine the base for alternation of stress and ( b ) to indicate that the last stressed vowel in the contour ...
... stress in the stress contour is high in tone rather than low . The single stress phoneme , accordingly , has two values : to determine the base for alternation of stress and ( b ) to indicate that the last stressed vowel in the contour ...
Seite 385
... stress used in reading Classical Arabic are later and derivative , not original . As a corollary to this thesis the author maintains that the phenomena in Western Arabic usually attributed to a shift of stress actually preserve an ...
... stress used in reading Classical Arabic are later and derivative , not original . As a corollary to this thesis the author maintains that the phenomena in Western Arabic usually attributed to a shift of stress actually preserve an ...
Inhalt
Number dedicated to Alfred L Kroeber | 1 |
Problems of longrange comparison in Penutian | 17 |
Glottochronologic counts of Hokaltecan material | 42 |
Urheberrecht | |
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allophones American analysis appears Associate called chapter classical College common comparative considered consists consonants contrast correspondences course culture definition derived described dialects dictionary discussion distinction distribution elements English evidence example expressed fact field final forms German given gives Greek important indicate initial Institute interest juncture kind language Latin latter least less Library linguistic marked material meaning method Michigan morpheme noun occur original pattern perhaps person Ph.D phonemes phonological position possible present probably problem Professor question reference regarded relationship represent respect seems semantic short similar sound Spanish speakers speech stress structure suggests syllable Table tion units University verb vocabulary vowel words York